Shaving Horse
Introduction by Peter Follansbee
The basic “workbench”
for
shaping with a drawknife or spokeshave is the shaving horse. The two
traditional
shaving horse styles are the Continental schnitzelbank or dumbhead and
the
English bodgerís bench.
While the dumbhead shaving
horse
is seen in 15th and 16th-century illustrations, there is no pictorial
or
documentary evidence for the English style prior to the late 19th
Century. It was in use by the time that H. L. Edlin's Woodland
Crafts in Britain: an Account of the Traditional Uses of Trees and
Timbers in the
British Countryside (1949) and J. Geraint Jenkins’ Traditional Country
Craftsmen
(1965) were recording the disappearing traditional woodland crafts of
Britain.
The English shaving horse may simply have escaped from record and, I
suspect,
its appearance in the 19th—20th Century was as a long- held,
traditional
tool. Whatever its origins, the English-style horse is a very effective
alternative
to the Continental style.
In the Jenkins and Edlin
studies it is used for preparation of stock for turning, and also to
make various hoops, rake handles, etc. So the common criticism of
english-style shaving horses—that they are only for short stock—is
exaggerated. Longer “stuff” needs
to be pulled out from under the yoke to be turned end for end as
opposed
to the Continental style in which the stock is just slid out from
beside
the “head.”
I remember a debate many years
ago
about the use of the English shaving horse versus the Continental
dumbhead. For preparing turning stock and shaving chair parts, I
strongly prefer the
English shaving horse because the action of gripping the stock is
centered, as opposed to the off-center action of the dumbhead style.
The traditional English
shaving horse,
with a free hinge mechanism, makes it easy to adjust the height of the
work
surface. This allows one to set the yoke as close to the workpiece as
possible,
which translates into easier foot action to achieve the most positive
gripping
of the workpiece.
Peter Follansbee works and
teaches
at the Plimoth Plantation historical village. He can be reached at:
Plimoth
Plantation, P.O. Box 1620, Plymouth, MA 02362.
508-746-1622 (phone) 508-746-4978 (fax).
Click here to see
Peter's All-Wood
Variation
or scroll down !!!

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Construction Notes by John Alexander
1. All wood can be fabricated, and assembled tree-wet. Stock can be rived, drawknifed, and scrub-planed. Adjustments for shrinkage can be made from time to time. Coat endgrain surfaces to retard moisture exchange (1). Click here for a high resolution version of diagram. It is a BIG file.

Tallow, wax, and commercial endgrain sealer (emulsified wax) all do the job. If you do not rive from the tree, search out a saw mill and buy green wood. Save energy and expense. Yellow pine, cheaper than oak, will do the job. Full 8/4 stock is good for all parts. Be sure to use straight-grained, shavable wood for the posts. Salvaged pallet wood can be used for the yoke, treadle sides and foot bar. Sometimes you can even find good pallet wood for posts. Nursery tree posts are cheap. Use what you can get, but always choose the hardest (heaviest) available wood. Oak is preferred. Straight-grained stock is crucial. Treadle frame sides can be made from surveyor’s stakes. Straight-grained 1" x 2" oak is preferred. A bench 52" long works well for most people; a 56" long bench will do for those 6' and over.

2. The flare of the posts is a compound angle determined by two things: a flare angle line (the oblique sides of a 3" equilateral triangle whose base is located 6" in from the end of the bench) along the plane of the bench surface (2).

1:3 slope erected perpendicular to the bench surface with its included angle resting on the flare angle line. An adjustable bevel gauge set at a slope of 3 (vertical) to 1 (horizontal) on the flare angle line with the bevel blade aiming at the center of the proposed post mortise determines the bit’s direction. Bore a 1" diameter pilot hole.
3. Taper the mortises first. I prefer an included
taper
angle of 1:12. The more acute the angle of the taper the better. A
reamer
can be made from saw steel slipped into a slot in a turned hardwood
cone
(3). The post tenons are shaved to fit these mortises. After the posts
are
driven home and trimmed to length (4), mark each matching mortise and
tenon
and index the correct orientation of each post on the underside of the
bench.
I use a permanent marker (5).
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4. Tapers readily adjust to moisture changes.
Just whack
the bench down on the posts at the beginning of work. The harder you
sit,
the tighter the fit. Conversely, it is easy to break the horse down.
When
shaving a post, first make a 2" x 2" x 22" square stick. Then taper, in
the
square, from 2" down to 1-1/4". Then, and only then, chamfer the stick
into
octagonal shape. Lastly, shave the top of the post to match the
mortise.
You can make a hollow tapered tenon auger (6), but it really isn’t
necessary.

Drive them home again and trim to length so that the top of the bench is about 18" above the floor. If the posts are green, they will shrink in time and protrude up through the bench. Drive the posts home again and retrim.
5. The sliding chock is split from a 6" long log. If during use the chock slips, wet it and the adjacent bench surface. The sliding optional seat (10" x 8") has battens underneath. Secure a flat piece of inner tube or rubber roofing underneath the seat to prevent sliding. 6. The eyebolts are standard hardware. The dimensions on the diagram are overall dimensions. Use wing nuts if you can find them. The eye on the treadle eyebolt should be on the shaver’s “handy” side (shown in the diagram for a right-handed person). All-thread can be used, but an eyebolt is more easily tightened (7).

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The fit between the work surface slot and the eyebolt at the end of
the
bench should be tight. The work surface wooden cross peg should also
fit
snugly in both the bolt eye and the hole bored across the work surface
(10).
One objection to the eyed metal treadle cross bolt is that edge tools
can
get nicked on the metal. I have also used threaded wood screws for both
the
treadle bolt and the work surface pivot. [See the accompanying sidebar
for
Peter Follansbee’s alternative construction.]
8. The treadle throat opening is the vertical
distance between the top of the work surface when resting upon the
bench and the bottom
of the yoke. This distance is crucial—about 3-3/4" to 4-1/2" works best
for
most people (8).

The larger the throat opening, the more the work surface points
upward. The shaved stick should aim at your belly button or a little
above (9). If
the shaved stick points too high, your shoulders will lift and cramp.
After
you have made the bench and work surface, mock up a treadle frame from
furring
strips to make sure that your arms are comfortable. You will spend a
lot
of time and effort at your horse—don’t waste them.
9. The 1" dowels on both the yoke and foot bar can
be
turned or whittled. Because of the two cross members are
removable, the treadle frame is easily broken down. The yoke can also
be pivoted by screwing
3/8" lag screws into the ends of the yoke and hack sawing off their
heads.
Don’t forget the 1/2" deep notch in the middle of one of the yoke
surfaces.
It is crucial for shaving square stock into octagons. The yoke should
rotate
freely enough so that when it is lowered it will slap down on the work
surface.
When the yoke and work surface become burnished wet them down. I use a
spray
bottle. Leather or rubber can be attached to the unnotched yoke
surface.
Because I use water, I don’t find this necessary. I’ve seen a piece of
toothed
saw blade or Sureform® blade screwed to the yoke. Effective, but
they
chew up the work piece.
10. When the shaving horse is completed, make a low
bench
with the same height and a 9"-10" x 36" top (11). This low bench holds
your
tools while working. It is an invaluable assembly bench and useful for
other
tasks not suitable for a carefully maintained, waist height workbench.
The
low bench and the rear of the shaving horse work together as a pair of
saw
horses.

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11. Good shaving and green woodworking (12). Wood is wonderful !

This web page is based on an article by John Alexander originally published in the magazine WOODWORK No. 52, August 1998.
Peter Follansbee's All-Wood Horse
pictures
and notes:
Twenty years ago I
built and used a shaving horse based on the one in John Alexander’s
Make a Chair from a Tree (Astragal Press). When John later improved
his shaving horse, I copied and adapted his newer version for use in my
joiner’s
shop at Plimoth Plantation in Plymouth, Massachusetts. I use the
shaving
horse mostly for preparation of turning stock and working various short
lengths
of “stuff” in the course of making the furniture used in
Plimoth’s
recreated 1627 houses. For various reasons, I wanted an all-wood
shaving
horse, so I’ve changed a couple of things about the example John
describes
in his article. My version requires slightly more effort to make, but
it
is not all that difficult to produce. A few of the components are
turned
on a lathe, but these could be shaved or whittled as well. Instead of
using
an eye bolt as the work surface pivot, I substituted a wooden block
tenoned
through a mortise in the workbench. This block consists of a head and a
shaft.
The head stands above the workbench and serves as the pivot for the
hinged
work surface. The work surface has a notch cut in its end to slip over
this
block. A 1/2" diameter wooden pin serves as the pivot bar. The shaft of
the
block is tenoned through the bench and secured underneath by a wedge
driven
through a tapered mortise in the shaft. Again, I’ve substituted a
wooden
component for the eyebolt that John uses for the treadle frame
assembly.
The treadle frame sides on my version swing on a turned piece. One end
has
a head about 1-1/4" in diameter. The shaft of the piece is 7/8"
diameter
and protrudes through the bench and the opposite arm. A tapered wedge
driven
through the shaft fastens the entire treadle frame apparatus together.
The
yoke and foot pieces are made in essentially the same manner as those
on
John’s example. The only other difference in my bench is that the bench
itself
and the work surface are made from 8/4 white pine. This is readily
available
and easily worked. Pine doesn’t burnish and become as slippery as oak.
| End Vice
Pole
Lathe Article |
Saw Steel
Tapered
Reamer
|
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| Universal Bit For Chair Making | Peter
Follansbee, Joiner Researching Historical Furniture |
Peter
Follansbee, Joiner Sleuthing the Past |